A new poll of reg­is­tered Texas vot­ers has found that sup­port for the death penal­ty, while still strong, has fall­en sig­nif­i­cant­ly over the past decade. A University of Texas/​Texas Tribune inter­net sur­vey of 1,200 reg­is­tered vot­ers con­duct­ed from April 16 – 22, 2021 found that 63% say they favor keep­ing the death penal­ty for peo­ple con­vict­ed of vio­lent crimes. That num­ber is down from 75% in February 2015 and 78% when the poll began in 2010

The poll found that few­er Texas vot­ers said they want to keep the death penal­ty than at any pri­or time in the pol­l’s his­to­ry. The num­bers reflect that 19.2% of the elec­torate who had expressed sup­port for keep­ing the death penal­ty in 2010 have changed their minds, near­ly one in five pri­or sup­port­ers. Since 2015, 16.0% of those who favored keep­ing the death penal­ty — near­ly one in six — have changed their minds.

The poll has a mar­gin of error of +/- 2.83 percentage points.